enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Experience - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Experience

    Experience refers to conscious events in general, more specifically to perceptions, or to the practical knowledge and familiarity that is produced by these processes. Understood as a conscious event in the widest sense, experience involves a subject to which various items are presented.

  3. Episodic memory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Episodic_memory

    General events. What it feels like stepping into the ocean in general. This is a memory of what a personal event is generally like. It might be based on the memories of having stepped in the ocean, many times during the years. Flashbulb memories. Flashbulb memories are critical autobiographical memories about a major event.

  4. Explicit memory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Explicit_memory

    Autobiographical memory is a memory system consisting of episodes recollected from an individual's life, based on a combination of episodic (personal experiences and specific objects, people and events experienced at particular time and place) and semantic (general knowledge and facts about the world) memory.

  5. Glossary of spirituality terms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_spirituality_terms

    Mysticism: From the Greek μυω (mueo, "to conceal"), is the pursuit of achieving communion with or conscious awareness of ultimate reality, the divine, spiritual truth, or God through direct, personal experience (intuition or insight) rather than rational thought; the belief in the existence of realities beyond perceptual or intellectual ...

  6. Awareness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Awareness

    Awareness is a relative concept.It may refer to an internal state, such as a visceral feeling, or on external events by way of sensory perception. [2] It is analogous to sensing something, a process distinguished from observing and perceiving (which involves a basic process of acquainting with the items we perceive). [4]

  7. Déjà vu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Déjà_vu

    Another possible explanation for the phenomenon of déjà vu is the occurrence of cryptomnesia, which is where information learned is forgotten but nevertheless stored in the brain, and similar occurrences invoke the contained knowledge, leading to a feeling of familiarity because the event or experience being experienced has already been ...

  8. Feeling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feeling

    Events and experiences are done and relived to satisfy one's feelings. Details and information about the past are used to make decisions, as past experiences of feelings tend to influence current decision-making, how people will feel in the future, and if they want to feel that way again. Gilbert and Wilson conducted a study to show how pleased ...

  9. Reminiscence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reminiscence

    Reminiscence is the act of recollecting past experiences or events. An example of the typical use of reminiscence is when people share their personal stories with others or allows other people to live vicariously through stories of family, friends, and acquaintances while gaining an authentic meaningful relationship with the people. [1]